Chapter 8

Chapter

Eight

LANGSTON

I adjusted my tie; the fabric suddenly felt like a noose around my neck.

Aven was sitting at her desk, which was still in my fucking office, by the way, typing something with that furrow between her eyebrows she got when she was concentrating.

It had been two days since we got stuck in the elevator, two days of remembering how she tasted on my fingers.

Numbers blurred in the expense report in front of me.

My eyes drifted back to Aven. She wore a painted-on blue dress that hugged every curve.

Her hair was pulled up in a complicated twist, exposing the back of her neck, the same neck I had my mouth on before the goddamn elevator started moving again.

My jaw tightened. My teeth grinded together hard enough that I’d probably need to see my dentist soon.

Focus, Black. These quarterly numbers weren’t going to review themselves.

Yet three minutes later, Aven stretched her arms overhead, making a small, satisfied sound as her spine popped, and my pen snapped between my fingers, causing blue ink to splatter across the report.

“Shit,” I muttered, grabbing tissues from my desk to blot the mess.

“You okay over there?” Aven asked, not looking up from her screen but with a little smile playing at the corner of her mouth. She knew what she was doing to me.

“Fine… equipment failure.” I grunted, tossing the broken pen in the trash.

The phrase conjured images I didn’t need right now of her pressed against the elevator wall.

My equipment worked fine until those lights came back on.

I shifted in my chair, adjusting myself as discreetly as possible.

This was fucking ridiculous. I was thirty-four years old, not some hormone-crazed teenager who couldn’t control himself around a pretty girl.

Except Aven wasn’t just any pretty girl. She was the one who’d been under my skin since we were seventeen, the one who saved my ass when nobody else would, the one who left and took something vital with her. And now she was right here, close enough to touch but professionally untouchable.

I wanted to maintain a professional demeanor in certain settings. I was her boss, her protector. Not the man who had her spread across this very desk after hours, but her gasping still echoed in my head.

A sharp knock interrupted my spiraling thoughts. Tamika entered the doorway with her tablet in hand. Her expression was unusually animated for my typically reserved assistant.

“Mr. Black, we’ve identified the person leaving items for Ms. Compton,” she announced. Her eyes darted between me and Aven.

I was on my feet instantly. “Who?”

“Mrs. Patrice from Bean & Brew. The coffee shop owner.” Tamika’s usually perfect posture showed a hint of excitement.

“She’s here, actually. Martinez caught her on camera this morning placing another…

item… by the coffee machine while delivering pastries for the meeting.

When security approached her, she broke down crying, asking to speak with you both. ”

Aven stood now, too, confusion evident on her face. “Mrs. Patrice? From Brew & Bean? Who always gives me extra whipped cream?”

Tamika nodded. “She’s waiting in the conference room. Martinez is with her.”

“Bring her in here,” I insisted, straightening my tie again, relief and confusion warring for dominance. It wasn’t Leo or some dangerous international stalker, just the local coffee shop owner who made those blueberry muffins Aven loved.

Moments later, Martinez ushered in Mrs. Patrice, the woman I contracted to deliver coffee and pastries for meetings.

A plump woman in her sixties, her gray-streaked hair pulled back in a bun, eyes red and swollen from crying.

Mrs. Patrice’s hands twisted a tissue into shreds as she stood inside the doorway, looking like she might run at any moment.

“Ms. Compton, Mr. Black, I’m so sorry. I never meant to frighten anyone,” she declared, voice quivering.

Aven stepped forward. “It’s okay. Why don’t you sit down and tell us what this is about?”

I hung back, watching as Mrs. Patrice sank into one of the chairs in front of my desk.

Her shoulders curled inward with shame. Relief flooded through me.

This woman was clearly not a threat, but embarrassment followed close behind.

All the security, all those precautions, and time spent preparing for a dangerous stalker, and it turned out to be the woman who remembered how everyone liked their coffee.

“I know you must think I’m crazy, but you reminded me so much of my Mekie… same smile, same way of talking with your hands, even your laugh. My daughter hasn’t spoken to me in eight years. Not since I… not since I couldn’t accept her life choices,” Mrs. Patrice explained, dabbing at fresh tears.

There was understanding on Aven’s face. “The origami cranes? You made those?” she asked.

Mrs. Patrice nodded. “Mekie and I used to fold them together. Her father was Japanese, and he taught us both when she was little. It was our special thing. When I saw you writing in your journal the first day, just like Mekie used to do, I thought maybe it was a sign. Especially when you left and I found the origami crane at your booth. One of my baristas told me you worked at Black Security, and I returned it, leaving it on your car. I wasn’t thinking clearly.

I miss her so much. Then you moved to Mr. Black’s office, I thought maybe you’d found my little gifts creepy.

It felt like I was close to Mekie when I left them for you. ”

“Oh, wait. So when you found the one I had in my notebook for evidence, you returned it. No wonder I thought it was Leo’s work.” I commented.

The room fell silent as we absorbed this explanation. The threatening actions sent Aven into a panic, which had me installing security systems and conducting surveillance, were just the misguided attempts of a grieving mother to connect with someone who reminded her of her estranged daughter.

“Mrs. Patrice, I understand missing someone that much. I really do, but you scared me. The cranes matched what a man used to leave for me while he was following me in South America.” Aven clarified.

Mrs. Patrice gasped, hand flying to her mouth. “Oh my God. I had no idea. I’m so sorry, baby. I would never intentionally frighten anyone like that.”

“I know. It’s okay. Now that I understand, maybe we could have coffee some time? I’d like to hear about Mekie.” Aven reached out to pat Mrs. Patrice’s trembling hand.

I watched this exchange of emotions, relieved that the threat was never real, embarrassed at the resources we’d wasted, but mostly admiration for Aven’s compassion. Where I saw a security breach to be managed, she saw a wounded human seeking connection.

“That would be nice. And I promise, no more surprise gifts. I should have talked to you from the beginning,” Mrs. Patrice insisted. A cautious smile broke through her tears.

While Aven continued comforting Mrs. Patrice, I stepped back, rolling my shoulders to release the tension that had been building for weeks. All that shit for nothing. Well, maybe not nothing, because it brought Aven back into my arms, into my life in ways I hadn’t allowed myself to hope for.

I realized the tight knot in my chest wasn’t just relief about the stalker situation. It was something more complicated, something had been growing since the moment Aven walked back into my office three weeks ago. It was something I was not sure I was ready to name but could no longer deny.

After Mrs. Patrice’s confession two days ago, I still felt like the world’s biggest dumbass.

What was worse? The time and resources wasted or the fact Aven was still in my office, with no legitimate reason to keep her here anymore?

Which meant it was time to have a conversation I wasn’t sure I was ready for.

I watched Aven over the rim of my coffee mug, trying to look casual while I figured out how to broach the subject. She was completely absorbed in whatever she was typing, a little wrinkle appearing between her eyebrows when she concentrated hard.

Fuck it. Just say it, Black. Rip off the band-aid.

“Now that we’ve resolved the… situation… I was thinking maybe you’d want to move back to your original workspace,” I inquired, setting down my mug with more force than necessary.

Aven looked up, one eyebrow raised. “You mean the basement dungeon?”

“It’s not a dungeon. It’s a perfectly functional archive room you yourself upgraded with all those… improvements,” I protested automatically.

“Mmm. I’ve gotten used to being up here. The light’s better for my eyes.” She turned back to her screen, dismissing the idea without even considering it.

That was it. No debate. No discussion. Damn, I guess she told me!

“Right. Better light. Of course,” I muttered, torn between irritation and relief.

Her lips curved into a half-smile that always made something twist in my chest. “Plus, you’d miss me too much,” she added, not looking up from her screen.

The comment hit too close to home, sending heat crawling up my neck. I turned away, pretending to search for something in my desk drawer while I got my face under control. She was not wrong. That was the thing. Having her here had been both torture and the best part of coming to work every day.

When I looked back up, she’d returned to her typing. Apparently uninterested in my reaction.

The rest of the day moved by in a blur of meetings and client calls.

By six in the evening, most of the staff had left, excited by their weekend plans.

I expected Aven to go as well. It was Friday after all, but when I returned from a meeting with Martinez, she was still at her desk, frowning at something on her screen.

“Thought you’d be gone by now. Don’t you have plans with your sister or something?” I asked, loosening my tie as I crossed to my desk.

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